Archive for November, 2015

Role reversal: Lewis County prosecutor reflects on becoming a burglary victim

Friday, November 6th, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Less than a week after an arrest was made for a burglary of former Centralia Police Chief Bob Berg’s house, an arrest was made in a break-in at Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer’s home that took place earlier this year.

Both occurred in Centralia and both were solved through confessions allegedly obtained by an inmate at the Thurston County Jail. The 38-year-old man has not been charged.

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Lewis County Prosecutor Jonathan Meyer

According to authorities, the inmate has named so far at least four individuals as his partners in crimes in more than a dozen burglaries in Lewis County since last year.

Berg’s home on Winterwood Drive was broken into in February of 2014, and Meyer’s in February of this year.

Meyer, 44, said although in his job he works with victims on a daily basis, being a victim himself is “kind of surreal.”

“It’s a weird feeling, to know your stuff’s out there somewhere,” he said.

His youngest daughter discovered it, when she got home from school and found the front door had been kicked in, he said. Their house is just outside the Centralia city limits on Mount Vista Road near Centralia High School.

She called him, he sent her somewhere safe and he called the police, he said.

Someone rummaged through the master bedroom and took jewelry and other personal items.

“They took my wife’s jewelry box, full of pieces I’d given her, including from her great grandmother, and a ring I’d given her of my grandmother’s” he said. ”

Meyer kept his small valuables in what he called a watch box. Among the items it contained before it was all stolen were his wedding rings, his Aberdeen High School class ring, his prosecutor’s badge and his Tenino Police Department reserve officer badge, he said.

He damaged his wedding ring when he was in college and got a new one, he said, that he’d happened to have left at home that day.

They also took a wicker laundry basket, he said.

The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office initially estimated the loss at about $3,300, but Meyer said it was much more.

One of the two suspects was arrested last week, found hiding in a garage on North Pearl Street in Centralia. Janet L. Gleason, 42, of Centralia, was charged the following day in Lewis County Superior Court with residential burglary, first-degree trafficking in stolen property and second-degree malicious mischief.

Meyer said he was told by detectives he was targeted by Gleason in retaliation for prosecuting her son.

Eighteen-year-old Dillan G. Gleason was sent to prison for five years after pleading guilty to stealing from relatives in the summer of 2014.

His grandmother at his sentencing hearing said she believed there was close to $300,000 cash from her lottery winnings in a safe that went missing. As part of the plea agreement, the younger Gleason signed back over $57,000 from a trust, according to his lawyer.

Meyer said in his line of work, he’s gotten threats from people, but involving his home and his family took it to a whole different level.

“I understand people are upset at me for doing my job, or the job that I do,” he said. “I get that; but that crosses the line.”

Meyer was elected prosecutor in 2010, and won a second term last November. Before that, he was in private practice in Centralia and did criminal defense work.

Gleason’s arraignment was yesterday. The case is being handled by an outside prosecutor, because of the conflict.

According to court documents, Gleason admitted only to being present in a car outside the residence when it happened. She contended Robert Collins, the Thurston County Jail inmate, gave her two jewelry boxes which she in turn gave to two friends.

Collins however, when interviewed with his lawyer present in September by Lewis County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Bruce Kimsey, said it was Gleason’s idea and that she asked for his help, according to her charging documents.

Collins allegedly admitted only that he forced the front door open and then Gleason ran into the house and headed upstairs, the documents state.

He said he yelled at her for getting him involved when he saw the badges, and that’s when she told him she was getting back at the prosecutor, according to the allegations.

Meyer said they recently got back the two jewelry boxes – his wife’s jewelry box and his watch box. He got back a necklace of his that had been cut apart and melted down, he said.

Late this summer, someone found his class ring in a gas station parking lot in Olympia, and tracked him down through his high school, to return it, he said.

Meyer said he didn’t know how many burglaries Collins has said he was involved in. He’s taken himself out of the loop on prosecuting the cases that relate to his burglary, he said.

He said he’s taken steps, “to do everything I can,” to make his family home safe. He reflected on how the experience has changed him, when he spoke about it earlier this week.

He has prosecuted people, he has defended people, and even sat as a judge, he said.

“To me, it makes me a more well-rounded prosecutor,” Meyer said. “Really, the part of that circle is, I hadn’t been a victim.”

Pacific County Prosecutor Mark McClain is handling Gleason’s case, according to Meyer’s Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Brad Meagher.

He just got the case or cases yesterday, Meagher said.

Her bail was set at $25,000. Her trial was put on the court calendar for Dec. 28.

Collins, who remains in the Thurston County Jail, is being held there on two cases from last year and at least one from this year, according to the jail’s online roster.

The only case he has in Lewis County Superior Court currently is one charge of possession of methamphetamine, from February of this year. His bail is set at $25,000.

Gleason has a current case in Lewis County Superior Court involving two counts of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver and one count of possession of methamphetamine, according to court papers. She has previous felony convictions for second-degree burglary in 2006 as well as violations of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act in 2005, 2001 and 1999.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Friday, November 6th, 2015
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DOMESTIC ASSAULT

• A 49-year-old Chehalis man was arrested last night after his girlfriend called 911 to say she was shoved against a window hitting her head on the sill, pulled across the room and punched in the eye at the 600 block of Centralia-Alpha Road east of Chehalis. Law enforcement responding around 8:30 p.m. were told the suspect drove away drunk and Gerald R. Ebner was subsequently pulled over in Chehalis on North National Avenue at Northwest Chamber of Commerce Way, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Ebner was booked into the Lewis County Jail for felony violation of a domestic violence no contact oder, according to the sheriff’s office. The case is referred to prosecutors for charges also of driving under the influence and fourth-degree assault, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

DRUGS

• A 19-year-old Winlock man stopped for riding an off road motorcycle on a city street in Vader yesterday was arrested for possession of marijuana yesterday afternoon. A deputy contacted him at the 700 block of A Street at about 4:35 p.m. and found a pipe with green burned residue and also that he was driving with a suspended license in the second degree, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Stardog Jededia R. Delao was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the sheriff’s office.

• Chehalis police were called about 1:35 a.m. today to the 200 block of Southeast Washington Avenue to take a report of items missing from an apartment, including medications.

VANDALISM

• Centralia police were called just before 6 o’clock this morning following the discovery of slashed tires on a vehicle at the 1000 block of North Tower Avenue.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, protection order violation; responses for alarm, hit and run, collision on city street, complaint about awful smell coming from retail marijuana store … and more.

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Thursday, November 5th, 2015
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•••

THEFT, THEFT, THEFT

• Police were called just before 8 o’clock yesterday morning about the theft of three chainsaws from the 1400 block of Logan Street in Centralia, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Someone reached through an unlocked apartment window at the 1400 block of Johnson Road in Centralia and stole a laptop computer, according to a report made to police yesterday. The theft reportedly occurred several weeks ago, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• An officer was called about 3:30 p.m. yesterday to the 1300 block of Lum Road in Centralia about possible theft by an employee, according to the Centralia Police Department.

CAR PROWL

• Police were called about 1:45 p.m. yesterday regarding a vehicle prowl at the 800 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia. Missing were knives, medication and a GPS device, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• Fishing equipment was stolen from the back of a truck at the 1300 block of Belmont Avenue in Centralia, according to a report made to police yesterday morning.

• A wallet, cash and cigarettes were among the itms stolen from a vehicle at the 300 block of Southwest Third Street in Chehalis sometime in the previous three days, according to a report made to the Chehalis Police Department yesterday morning.

VANDALISM

• Chehalis police took a report yesterday afternoon of graffiti on a garage at Southwest Alfred Street.

DRUGS

• An officer responding just after 4 o’clock this morning about suspicious activity at the 100 block of Southwest Interstate Avenue in Chehalis contacted a person wanted for a warrant and a search incident to his arrest turned up drug paraphernalia that field-tested positive for heroin, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Travis G. Frost, 29, of Chehalis, was was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

• A 19-year-old Centralia resident was arrested for shoplifting and being a minor in possession of marijuana late yesterday afternoon following an incident at the 500 block of South Tower Avenue in Centralia. Uriah W. Osborne, who had an outstanding warrant, was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the Centralia Police Department.

• A 28-year-old Chehalis resident picked up for a warrant about 12:45 p.m. yesterday at the 100 block of Southwest 10th Street in Chehalis was also found to have a small amount of suspected methamphetamine, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Donald B. Lindberg was booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to police.

OOPS

• Chehalis police were called about 4:45 p.m. yesterday after a firearm was found in the bathroom of a restaurant on the 100 block of Southwest Interstate Avenue. Later in the evening, police were contacted by an individual who said he dropped his 9 mm handgun in a restroom in the area, according to the Chehalis Police Department.

‘PLEASE, DON’T LET HIM BITE ME’

• A 33-year-old Winlock man wanted for warrants and followed from Ferrier Road to Gee Cee’s truck stop yesterday afternoon fled on foot into the tree line, but threw up his hands and surrendered when K-9 Axel got within about 30 yards of him, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Kyle E. Rogers was taken into custody and booked into the Lewis County Jail, according to the sheriff’s office. His warrants were for contempt of court out of Kelso and from the state Department of Corrections, Chief Deputy Stacy Brown said.

ON THE ROAD

• A van and a semi truck both sustained major damage when the driver of the van fell asleep and crossed the centerline at the 3500 block of Harrison Avenue in Centralia yesterday. A deputy responding after the approximately 1 p.m. wreck noted nobody was injured, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, violation of no contact order, driving under the influence; responses for dispute, shoplifting, suspicious circumstances … and more.

Read about local legal system turns autistic Centralia man onto the streets shortly before his death …

Wednesday, November 4th, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – KOMOnews.com reports their investigation found the 26-year-old autistic man who drowned in the Chehalis River last spring had been released from a three-day stay in the jail and ordered by a Centralia Municipal Court judge to have no contact with his mother, his caregiver, just days before he died.

Reporter Tracy Vedder tells of watching Centralia resident Jessy Hamilton’s video arraignment, noting he didn’t appear to know what was going on, didn’t react when the judge asked him to confirm his address and said it showed someone else’s hand take the pen from Hamilton to sign court documents.

Hamilton was found floating face down in the water at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on the morning of May 30, shortly after police were called there in response to a report he was missing. The drowning was ruled to be accidental.

Vedder’s report published yesterday includes an interview with David Carlson with Disability Rights Washington, a federally-funded agency that protects individuals with disabilities, who said everyone who touched Jessy’s case that last week had a responsibility to step in.

“From the police, to the jail, to the public defender and the judge, Carlson says anyone could have, should have just picked up a phone and called adult protective services,” Vedder said.

The KOMO news reporter said she continues to keep looking into the case.

Read more here: “No Safe Haven: ‘The system couldn’t have failed Jessy more‘” from KOMOnews.com on Tuesday Nov. 3, 2015

Election: Bulk of ballots counted, but not all fire service issues certain

Wednesday, November 4th, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – The fire chief in Mossyrock says he’s on pins and needles watching the numbers coming from yesterday’s election.

It’s the second time Lewis County Fire District 3 has asked voters to approve a bond to build a new station. It failed narrowly in April, and now, the tally is still a bit shy of the 60 percent yes votes needed, according to Chief Doug Fosburg.

When the preliminary results were released last night in the all vote-by-mail election, 244 people had said yes, coming to 58.65 percent. Rejecting the measure were 172 people, or 41.35 percent.

The district ran the proposal again, thinking there would be a better turnout during a general election, Fosburg said.

Local voter turnout overall so far is just over 30 percent, according to the Lewis County Auditor’s Office elections department.

Officials indicate there are an estimated 3,000 ballots left to count from throughout Lewis County, and they will release the results of a second count this afternoon.

The Chehalis Fire Department won’t need to wait for today’s updated numbers as among the nearly 1,000 votes cast for their emergency medical services levy renewal, almost 82 percent of the people voted yes.

It, like other levies on the ballot need only a simple majority to pass.

Another measure with such a wide spread that it looks like a done deal, is the Napavine area fire department’s request for an increase in their fire services levy. Voting no on Newaukum Valley Fire and Rescue’s proposal are 65.58 percent.

Lewis County Fire District 11’s fire services levy is passing, with 65.57 of their Pe Ell area voters giving their approval.

A closer vote is Cowlitz-Lewis Fire District 20’s emergency medical services levy. Voters in the Vader area are supporting it so far with 54.72 percent yes votes.

Three fire districts in Lewis County have contested commissioner positions.

For Lewis County Fire District 15 in Winlock, candidate Jerry Craft got the vote from 64.96 percent of the people, compared with 30.04 percent casting their ballots for Stan Hankins.

For Lewis County Fire District 2 in Toledo, 64.38 percent voted for Mike Thomas, while 35.62 percent want Dale Nielsen.

The race in Lewis County Fire District 8, Salkum is somewhat closer. Candidate Rick Wood took 54.51 percent of the vote while Don Taylor has 45.49 percent.

The election won’t be final and certified until November 24.

Unrelated to the fire service, longtime Morton Police Chief Dan Mortensen who will retire at the end of this year, is running for mayor. The race is uncontested, and 132 votes have been cast for Mortensen.

Updated preliminary results can be found this afternoon at the Lewis County Auditor’s Office, Elections Department, here.
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For background, read “Election Day: Numerous fire departments and candidates seeking support” from Sunday November 1, 2015, here

Sirens: Daily police and fire roundup

Wednesday, November 4th, 2015
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•••

REPEATED BURGLARY CHEHALIS

• A 79-year-old Chehalis woman who has noticed items missing since August went ahead and called police yesterday to investigate. An officer responding to the 1200 block of Southwest 22nd Street learned that first it was beer, then in September it was a doll and then last month, a doll collection and painting supplies disappeared from her studio, according to the Chehalis Police Department. There are no suspects at this time, according to police.

THEFT OF FIREARMS

• A deputy was called yesterday about a break-in to a Chehalis area home along the 200 block of Rodgers Road in which a Ruger pistol was among the stolen items. An 84-year-old man reported that he and his wife returned from an Easter time vacation, they found footprints inside their house, but nothing seemed to have been disturbed and there was no sign anyone forced their way inside, according to the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office. Also missing is a machete and a shovel, according to the sheriff’s office.

• A K-Mart shopper called police last night after finding his vehicle prowled. The victim said it was about 7 p.m. and he locked his doors, but when he came back out, the vehicle doors were unlocked, according to the Chehalis Police Department. Among the items missing is a 45 caliber semi-automatic pistol, according to police.

THEFT OF FOOD

• A 27-year-old man was arrested yesterday evening after allegedly walking out of a store without paying with a cart full of groceries. Police called about 7:15 p.m. yesterday to the 500 block of South Tower Avenue arrested Daniel J. Phillips, of Centralia, for third-degree theft and then released him, according to the Centralia Police Department.

AND MORE

• And as usual, other incidents such as arrests for warrants, shoplifting, driving under the influence; responses for dispute, hit and run, vandalism, possible fraud, misdemeanor theft, misdemeanor assault, elevator rescue, collision on city street, possible child abuse, teenager who won’t get out of bed and go to school … and more.

News brief: Baseball bat attack suspects still at large

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2015

By Sharyn L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Nobody has been arrested following the weekend baseball bat beating of a 40-year-old man by a group of people in Centralia.

Centralia police detectives don’t even know how the victim is doing.

Detective Sgt. Pat Fitzgerald said the man was conscious and able to speak to an officer, but said he didn’t want to, when asked to give a taped statement.

Without the victim’s cooperation, detectives can’t get his medical information from the hospital, Fitzgerald said today.

Police were called at 3:36 a.m. on Sunday, not by the victim, but by a friend who said he just wanted him to get some medical help. The friend said the 40-year-old was attacked earlier at West Fourth Street and Washington Avenue, Fitzgerald said.

Officers and aid responded to that call, to the 200 block of North Ash Street. The victim, who has a Chehalis address, had been repeatedly struck in the head and body by as many as five individuals, according to police.

“He told the officer he’d been jumped, and it was in retaliation for something to do with his ex-girlfriend,” Fitzgerald said.

The person who phoned for help left the scene, he said. Detectives know the victim was transported by AMR to Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia.

But without his cooperation, detectives don’t know much more, and there’s not much more they can do, the sergeant indicated.

“We know it was a group of people, he may have known some of them, he was not sure,” he said.
•••

For background, read “News brief: Violent Halloween night in Centralia puts one male in hospital” from Sunday November 1, 2015, here